Schwartzman v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance

2 S.W.2d 593, 318 Mo. 1089, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 609
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 4, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2 S.W.2d 593 (Schwartzman v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwartzman v. London & Lancashire Fire Insurance, 2 S.W.2d 593, 318 Mo. 1089, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 609 (Mo. 1928).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity to set aside and cancel an appraisal had under the terms of a fire insurance policy issued by defendant to plaintiffs, covering the furnishings and contents of the Miller Hotel, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and to recover the loss and damage resulting from a fire. The trial court set aside and canceled the appraisal, fixing the sound value of the contents of the hotel at $55,000 and the loss at $51,600. As the policy issued by defendant was one of a number aggregating $55,000, the trial court found defendant's proportion of the loss and damage to be $9381.82, with interest accrued thereon of $1295.56, rendering judgment for $10,587.38 in favor of plaintiffs, from which defendant appealed.

The assignment of errors comprises two specifications: first, the court erred in canceling the appraisal and refusing to find for plaintiff in an amount equal to defendant's proportionate share of the award, and, second, the court erred in finding and fixing the loss and damage at $51,600 and in rendering judgment against defendant in an amount based on this finding.

The facts develop that in August, 1920, plaintiffs purchased the Miller Hotel, paying for it, according to their evidence, the sum of $55,000, and receiving therefor a bill of sale which plaintiff failed or refused to offer in evidence or account for. We think we are justified from the evidence in stating that the purchase comprised the hotel as a going concern and included the good will, the lease and all appurtenances. The hotel comprised 158 bedrooms, the original furnishings of which in 1916 cost $14,085.67. Plaintiffs' insurance policies aggregated $55,000, of which the policy in suit, issued August 17, 1920, for $10,000, covered, according to the policy, the property described as follows:

"The amount insured by this policy covers and applies on hotel and other furniture, furnishings and fixtures of every kind and descriptions; wall and ceiling decorations and other improvements and betterments to the building made by assured as tenants or made by former lessees of the herein described premises; printed books, family wearing apparel, silver and plated ware, pictures and paintings *Page 1095 (at not exceeding cost) and their frames, sculpture, tools, musical instruments, billiard and pool tables and their appurtenances, tools, utensils, fire extinguishing apparatus, electric fans, signs, awnings; fuel, and all other equipment, appliances, implements, articles, materials, supplies other than stock of merchandise and effects in any way used in or pertaining to the business of assured."

The building, in which the business of the Miller Hotel was carried on, caught fire on February 13, 1921, about one A.M. Thereafter, in accordance with the terms of the insurance policies, the insurance companies subject to the risk and the plaintiffs provided a joint appraisal, the plaintiffs naming an appraiser as did the insurance companies, and the Minneapolis court appointing an umpire. The board of appraisers fixed the sound value of the property insured at $38,669.11, and the loss and damage at $30,000, the report being signed and assented to by the two appraisers and the umpire, acting as an appraisal board. Plaintiffs, dissatisfied with the damages awarded them, brought this suit to set aside the appraisal, averring that while plaintiffs' appraiser was disinterested and impartial, neither defendant's appraiser nor the umpire were disinterested and impartial and that defendant's appraiser was guilty of misconduct. Such other facts as are pertinent will later appear.

I. The insurance policy sued on provides the appointment of competent, disinterested and impartial appraisers and an umpire. The evidence discloses in this regard that the umpire appointed by the court was treasurer, secretary, andInterested stockholder of the David C. Bell Investment Company,Appraiser. whose business consisted of real estate, loans, insurance and rentals. Under the Minnesota law a corporation is disqualified from acting as agent for an insurance company. While employees of the above company were appointed agents of various insurance companies, the earnings on the business involved went into the coffers of the Bell Investment Company. On February 13, 1921, no insurance company involved in fire loss sustained by plaintiffs was represented by said investment company or its officers or employees. The umpire, appointed about April 1, 1921, took oath as appraiser April 27, 1921. During the interval employees of the Bell Investment Company were appointed agents of the Firemen's Insurance Company of Newark, which company was a party to the arbitration. The umpire knew of the agency after his appointment and before he qualified as umpire, which fact he failed to divulge. As a stockholder of the Bell Investment Company he was entitled to receive dividends, which necessarily included earnings of the business brought to it by the Fireman's Insurance Company. He thus became interested, indirectly though it may be, as agent of the insurance company involved in the appraisal, and consequently disqualified and incompetent to *Page 1096 act as umpire. Even though the evidence tends to establish that no conscious or actual bias, prejudice, influence or fraud was disclosed on the part of the umpire, yet public policy and an unconscious predilection to favor one's interest renders an arbitrator, directly or indirectly interested in the result of the arbitration, partial, incompetent and disqualified. It is evident from what we have said that the appraisal was void and of no effect, thus obviating the necessity of considering the competency of defendant's appraiser. [Goodwin v. Ins. Co.,118 Iowa 601; Schoenich v. Ins. Co., 109 Minn. 388; Assurance Co. v. Hall, 143 Ala. 168; Railway Conductors' Benefit Assn. v. Robinson, 147 Ill. 159; Produce Refrigerating Co. v. Ins. Society, 91 Minn. 210; Hyeronimus v. Allison, 52 Mo. 102.]

II. That, in an equity suit, the cause is triable de novo, thus constituting the appellate court the trier of fact as well as of equitable principles, is the generally accepted doctrine, adhered to in this State. [Harwood v. Toms, 130Equity Trial. Mo. 225, 32 S.W. 666; Canty v. Halpin, 294 Mo. 118, 242 S.W. 97.]

III. We are thus brought to a review of the second specification of error. This relates to the action of the trial court in finding and fixing the loss and damage, suffered by plaintiffs, in the sum of $51,600. Plaintiffs, in arguing the soundness of the trial court's finding, state onExtent of the one hand that the trial court, sitting inTrial De Novo. equity, decreed the award canceled, and that, relative to that finding, this court is not, of course, bound. Conversely, they maintain that in fixing and ascertaining the value of the property, the amount of damage and the consequent recovery, the trial court was not sitting as a chancellor, but as a law court, deciding a strictly legal question resulting in a money judgment at law. Therefore, they assert, as there was substantial evidence upon which to base the finding of loss and damage, the action of the trial court is in that regard not open to review.

The cause here litigated was cognizable in a court of equity and it was the duty of such court to refuse to enter a partial or incomplete decree.

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Bluebook (online)
2 S.W.2d 593, 318 Mo. 1089, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartzman-v-london-lancashire-fire-insurance-mo-1928.