Shannon Furniture Co. v. Federal Surety Co.

1932 OK 678, 15 P.2d 22, 159 Okla. 205, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 605
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 11, 1932
Docket20305
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1932 OK 678 (Shannon Furniture Co. v. Federal Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shannon Furniture Co. v. Federal Surety Co., 1932 OK 678, 15 P.2d 22, 159 Okla. 205, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 605 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

SWINDALL, J.

The plaintiff in error, as. plaintiff in the trial court, commenced an action against the defendant in error, as defendant in the ¡trial court, to recover on its “Paymaster, Messenger and Office Robbery Policy.” The general indemnity provision under which recovery is sought is contained in paragraph 3 of the indemnity provisions of the policy and is as follows:

“III. To indemnify the assured for all loss by robbery committed during the hours specified in section (a) of item 7 of the declarations, of property, from within the assured’s premises.”

Paragraph 4 of the policy immediately follows this indemnity .provision and is as follows!:

“IV. The company shall have no liability under any one of the foregoing indemnity paragraphs I, II and III unless there shall be stated in the declarations a separate and specific amount specifically designated as the amount payable under such paragraph and a premium therefor. If the declarations do¡ not show such specific amount and premium applicable to any one of such foregoing paragraphs, the company shall have no liability under the particular paragraph for which no amount and premium is designated in the declarations. The limits of the company’s liability under this policy shall be the several specific amounts stated in the declarations. ”

Upon the face of the policy is this provision :

“This agreement is subject to the following conditions:
“Definitions A. ‘Robbery’ within the meaning of this policy, is limited to a felonious and forcible taking of property: (a> By violence inflicted upon the custodian or custodians in the actual care and custody of the property at the ¡time; or (b) by putting such custodian or custodians in fear of violence; or (c) by an overt felonious act committed in the presence of such custodian or custodians and of which they were actually cognizant at the tíme; or (d) from the person or direct care or custody of a custodian, who, while conveying property *206 insured under this policy, has been killed or rendered unconscious by injuries inflicted maliciously or sustained accidentally. ‘Money’ as used in tins policy shall mean currency, coin, bank notes, bullion, uncanceled postage and revenue stamps in. current use, United S'tates War Savings Certificate' Stamps and Canada War Savings Stamps not attached to registered certificates, and ‘Thrift’ stamps. ‘Securities’ as used in this policy shall mean only such bonds, debentures, checks, coupons, demand and time drafts, promissory notes, bills of exchange, -warehouse receipts, bills of lading, express and postal money orders, certificates of stock and deposit, and other instruments, as are negotiable and as respects wliieb, when negotiated, the assured has no recourse against the innocent holder. ‘Property’ as used in this policy is limited to money and securities as above defined and such articles of merchandise as are actually carried in the line of business of the assured and described in tbe declarations. ‘Custodian’ as used in this policy shall mean; (1) the assured, if an individual; (2) a member of the firm, if the assured is a copartnership; (3) any officer of the assured, if the assured is a corporation; (4) any person not less than 17 nor more than 65 years of age, who is in the regular employ of the assured and duly authorized by liim to act as paymaster, (messenger, manager, cashier, clerk or siales person, and while so acting, to have the care and custody of property covered hereby. In no event shall a watchman or a porter be considered a custodian. ‘Guard’ as used in this policy shall mean any male person not less than 3j7 nor more than 65 years of age who accompanies the custodian by direction of the assured, but wbo is not a driver of a public conveyance. ‘Premises’ as used in- this policy shall mean tbe interior of the assured’s office, store, factory, or plant, at the location specified! in item 2 of the declarations.”

The declarations referred to in indemnity paragraph 3, item 7, consist of the following specifications and restrictions:

“The insurance granted under indemnity paragraph III of this policy and the premium therefor shall apply specifically as provided in sections (b) and (e) of this item, during the hours beginning at 7 o’clock a. m. and ending at 12 o’clock p. m. within the policy period.
“Section (b). On property from within the premises when at least one custodian is on duty therein * * * $1,500 — $30.38.”

Effective April 12, 1926, appears the following indorsement; read $3,500, and item 9- is amended to show the company’s total liability under both items shall in no event exceed $7,000.”

“In consideration of an additional premium of $40.43, it is understood and agreed that item 6, section (b) is amended to read $3,500; item 7, section (b) is amended to-

Item 7 of the declarations being the only item involved in this action, the other items will not be discussed.

The facts are undisputed and are briefly as follows: On the nighit of December 24, 1927, Grant Brown, a stockholder in and the; buyer and manager for tbe plaintiff, left the latter’s store after closing and locking the outside door. He immediately walked-, to his car about a block away and started to get in tbe car, when he discovered two men -by his car with guns awaiting him. They got in the car with him and drove out about six or seven miles west of Tulsa. They drove past another, ear parked out there, and after passing the parked car a short distance turned and came back and drove past the parked car again and stopped about a hundred yards from it. One of the men stayed with Bro-wn in his car and the other man went back to the parked car. In a short time three men came back to the car where Brown was held under guard by the other man, and they told Brown they wanted the combination to the safe. He denied knowing it and argued with them a little while. They informed him that they knew that he knew the combination on thesaf-e because they slaw him in the store quite a little while and had been watching him, and that they saw him working - it that morning and saw him lock it up at night. So, finally he gave them the combination orally. It was not tbe right one. They went back to their car and talked a little while and then came back to his car and said: “I don’t believe that it is the right combination, and there is going to be some fellows stay out here with you while we go up there and try it and we .do not want to fool around with th-e' wrong combination, and if it is not right it will be too bad for you.” And Brown said: “You had better write it down.” So they found an envelope and he gave them the correct combination and they wrote it on ■the envelope. They took it back and discussed it a little while, and then said: “We will go up and try it. These other follows will stay with you. ” They then took Brown out of his car and to a place up the road about 50 or 75 yards and made him lie down. Two of the men stayed with him while the others went back to town. They also said that they had some fellows up there and that they did not want to detain them, that they wanted the combination *207 and they said the reason they wanted the right combination was that they did not want to go up there fooling around and not have it and have to come back and lose time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 678, 15 P.2d 22, 159 Okla. 205, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-furniture-co-v-federal-surety-co-okla-1932.