Sargent v. American Insurance

253 N.W. 613, 218 Iowa 430
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 13, 1934
DocketNo. 42318.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 253 N.W. 613 (Sargent v. American Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargent v. American Insurance, 253 N.W. 613, 218 Iowa 430 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

*431 Stevens, J.-

Appellee had two policies of insurance upon a dwelling house in the city of Des Moines, one with the American Insurance Company of. Newark, New.Jersey, .appellant herein, dated May 11, 1930, and the. other, issued by the Mechanics Insurance Company of Philadelphia, dated October 30th of the same year. Each policy insured the dwelling for $2,500, and each contained the following statutory provision:

“XVI. This company shall not be liable under this policy for a greater proportion of any loss on the described property, or for loss by and expense of removal from premises endangered by fire, than the amount hereby insured shall' bear to the whole amount of valid and collectible insurance covering such property.”

The property was damaged by an explosion in the furnace in the basement of such residence on March 18, 1931. On or about June 30th following, action was commenced upon the policy held by appellee in the Mechanics Insurance Company. This action was begun and prosecuted to judgment in the municipal court of the city of Des Moines. The judgment bears date November 9, 1931, and is for $662. The defendant in that action appealed from the judgment thus rendered in the municipal court to this court, and it was affirmed by an opinion filed March 14, 1933. Subsequent to the date of the judgment above, referred to, the insured, appellee herein, commenced an independent action upon the. policy issued to him by the appellant company to recover the full amount of his alleged loss, which he alleged to be $1,'500. Judgment .was entered in this action in. favor of appellee on December 13,' 1932, upon the verdict of a jury in the sum- of $1,000. The present appeal is from this latter judgment.

In addition to a general denial and certain material admissions, appellant, by its answer and amendment thereto, set up two separate and distinct defenses. In the first of the aforesaid separate defenses, appellant.set up the issuance and existence' of the two policies already referred to, set up the action and judgment entered in the municipal court alleging that such judgment was. for the full amount of the loss sustained by appellee, and that, :by reason of the commencement and prosecution of said action to judgment; appellee waived his right to maintain this action against appellant, and that, by reason of the foregoing, he is estopped to prosecute the same.

In the other separate defense, the aforesaid judgment against *432 the Mechanics Insurance Company is pleaded as a full and complete adjudication of all claims which appellee may now have had under the policy issued to him by the appellant company. That is,- it is the thought of appellant that a contract of insurance is a contract of indemnity, and that payment in full of the loss constitutes full satisfaction. The theory of the foregoing special defenses is supplemented in argument by the contention that appellee, on- a date subsequent to the rendition of the judgment in this action, received and accepted payment in full of the judgment against the Mechanics Insurance Company. A certified copy of the record showing satisfaction of the judgment has been filed in- this court. The situation thus presented finds appellee in the possession of $662, the amount of the judgment entered in the municipal court, and also the holder of a judgment for $1,000 against appellant entered herein in the district court. ■

It is strenuously urged by counsel for appellant that it is the duty of this court in this situation to reverse the judgment herein. There are difficulties in the way of appellant’s contention which are obviously insurmountable. This court in law actions sits for the purpose of correcting errors of the court in which judgment has béen entered. No plea in abatement was filed in the court below, nor does the record disclose that an application was made to the court for a continuance. It is eleméntary that the insured had a right to commence separate actions upon each of the policies issued to him on the property damaged by the explosion. The liability of each of the respective insurance companies was limited to the proportion which the amount of insurance' in each policy bore to the whole amount of valid and collectible insurance on the property. The amount of the insurance named in éach of the policies is $2,500. The pro rata liability of each is thus easily computed. It will be observed from what has already been said that at the time of the trial of the present action in the district court an appeal was pending in the action against the Mechanics Insurance Company in this court. The judgment,' therefore, was final only in the event it should not be reversed by this court. It was proper, of course, for appellant to plead and prove the judgment referred to in the municipal court. That judgment does not, however, for obvious reasons, in the light of the facts and proceedings disclosed, constitute a complete defense to appellee’s cause of action. Appellant, apparently, recognized that fact. Evidence was introduced in *433 its behalf for the purpose of proving its solvency. The evidence also shows that a supersedeas bond on appeal had been duly filed in the office of the clerk of the municipal court. Appellant could not then show that appellee had received final payment in satisfaction of the judgment because, at the time of the trial, it had not been paid and counsel in that action was seeking to avoid the judgment by obtaining a reversal thereof in. this court. If, for any reason, the Mechanics Insurance' Company was not liable to appellee for any portion of his loss, then the policy held by him- in that company did not constitute valid and collectible insurance. This provision of the statute -written into the policy was available to appellant only upon proof of the necessary facts. The burden of making such proof rested upon appellant. Cole v. Iowa State Insurance Co., 201 Iowa 979, 205 N. W. 3.

Obviously, the record before us fail's to meet the burden resting upon it to show that appellee had other valid and collectible insurance upon the property alleged to have been damaged by the explosion. Proof that the Mechanics Insurance Company was solvent did not fully meet such burden. Something further was necessary. The judgment was not yet a finality, and could not operate-at the time of the trial as a final adjudication of the claims of appellee upon the policy here involved. The certified copy of the record showing payment and satisfaction of the judgment in the' municipal court is not a part of the record in this case. No motion or application of any kind presenting the fact thus shown has been filed in this court.

The court in its instructions submitted the issue of other' valid and collectible insurance to the jury. The jury, as above stated, returned a verdict in favor of appellee for '$1,000'. Exceptions were preserved to the instructions of the court, and propositions based thereon have been assigned in this court. They are not, however, in any way covered by brief points or argument. There is a mere naked reference to the instructions in appellant’s argument. The charge must, therefore, be treated as the law of the case. Manifestly, appellant could not admit, upon the trial below, that the policy of the Mechanics Insurance Company, upon which judgment had been entered in the municipal court, represented valid arid collectible insurance.

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253 N.W. 613, 218 Iowa 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargent-v-american-insurance-iowa-1934.