Shawnee Mut. Fire Ins. v. School Board of School Dist. No. 31

1914 OK 447, 143 P. 194, 44 Okla. 3, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 630
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 22, 1914
Docket2789
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1914 OK 447 (Shawnee Mut. Fire Ins. v. School Board of School Dist. No. 31) 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
Shawnee Mut. Fire Ins. v. School Board of School Dist. No. 31, 1914 OK 447, 143 P. 194, 44 Okla. 3, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 630 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

This is a suit on a policy of fire insurance. The main defense of the company was the claim that the policy had been forfeited by the use of gasoline on the premises, contrary to an answer made in the application for insurance, and because it increased the hazard. The school' district pleaded a waiver in that, among other things, the insurance company with full knowledge of all the facts, and especially the facts set out as defensive matter avoiding the policy,, received from the school district the payment of a school warrant which had been issued at the time of the execution of the policy. The school district also claimed thát the agent taking the application for the insurance was fully informed of the uses to which the building would be put, and of how it was to be lighted, and was directed to put same in the application for insurance, and agreed to do so, and that the officers of the school district believed it had been done, and that therefore the agent taking the application w,as the agent of the company, and his knowledge bound it within the scope of his agency, which scope embraced those matters involved in the taking of the application. At a trial had at the October, 1909, term of court, the court sustained the demurrer of the insurance company to the evidence; and within three days thereafter, the school district filed its motion for a new trial, which motion was continued over until the January-term of court, at which term it was sustained and a new trial granted. The insurance company appeals, by case-made properly .certified, from the order of the court sustaining the motion for a new trial.

To sustain its appeal, the insurance company urges : (1) That a motion for a new trial is unnecessary and improper where the court sustains a demurrer to the evidence; and (2) a motion for a new trial being improper and unnecessary, the court lost jurisdiction, to, vacate the order sustaining the demurrer to the evidence, with the expiration of the term at which it was entereu, and for that reason the judgment of the court became final, and the court was without power to order a new trial. The insurance *5 company further contends and argues tha't the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence was proper, and will so appear from an examination of the evidence, because: (1) That when the school warrant was received, it was the equivalent of a cash payment, and therefore, having received the money on the warrant with knowledge of all the facts and circumstances concerning the risk, would not constitute a waiver of the forfeiture of the policy; and (2) if this position is held to be untrue, and the warrant is to be considered as an obligation rather than as a cash payment, then the same was past due when the fire occurred, and the policy was void under other provisions of the policy; and (3) that this policy, being in the form prescribed by the Legislature, is to be construed as a statute, as well as a contract, and that there could be no waiver except by written indorsement on the policy made by an officer of the company.

1. Taking the points up in the order named, counsel are in error in the contention that a motion for a new trial is unnecessary and improper in cases where the court has sustained a demurrer to the evidence. The contrary is true in this jurisdiction, as may be seen from a number of decisions of this court. In the case of Insurance Co. of North America v. Little, 34 Okla. 449, 125 Pac. 1098, this precise point was under review, and the court in that case uses the following language in the syllabus:

“A ruling on a demurrer to the evidence being a decision occurring at the trial, and to review which, on appeal, a motion for a new trial is necessary, it follows that, although the trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence, yet, upon a motion for new trial being filed, the court has the power to grant it.”

The above case relies for authority upon Stump v. Porter, 31 Okla. 157, 120 Pac. 639; Ardmore Oil & Milling Co. v. Doggett Grain Co., 32 Okla. 280, 122 Pac. 241; Gruble v. Ryus et al., 23 Kan. 195; Pratt v. Kelley, 24 Kan. 111; Norris v. Evans, 39 Kan. 668, 18 Pac. 818; Lott v. K. C., Ft. S. & G. R. R. Co., 42 Kan. 293, 21 Pac. 1070; and Coy v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co., 69 Kan. 321, 76 Pac. 844.

2. Plaintiff’s contention that a motion for a new trial was unnecessary, under'the circumstances of this case, having failed, *6 his second contention that the court was without jurisdiction to pass upon the motion, after the expiration of the term at which the judgment was entered sustaining the demurrer to the evidence, also fails for the reason that the court may continue the hearing of a motion for a new trial to another term and retain jurisdiction then to pass upon it. Having determined that a motion for a new trial was proper, and that therefore the court had jurisdiction to pass upon the same at the succeeding term, we find that all that is left in the case is the demand that we review the action of the court in granting a new trial; and, in undertaking so to review this action, we are met at the outset with the very long line of authorities holding, as was said in St. L. & S. F. R. Co. v. Wooten (not yet officially reported) :

“The discretion of the trial court in granting.a new trial is so broad that its action in so doing will not be disturbed on appeal until the record shows clearly that the court has erred in its view of some pure and unmixed question of law, and that the order granting a new trial is based upon such erroneous view of the law.”

The above text in the Wooten case is based upon ten or twelve cases cited, to which we might add numerous others, if we considered it necessary. 'The reason for so holding is also gone into at some length in that case, which includes a lengthy quotation from the earlier case of Hogan et al. v. Bailey, 27 Okla. 15, 110 Pac. 890, in which case Justice Dunn went very fully and thoroughly into the matter. In this case the motion for a new trial embraced the following grounds:

“That the decision is contrary to the evidence.”
“That the decision is contrary to law.”
“For errors of law occurring at the trial.”
“Error in excluding certain testimony.”
“Error in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence.”

The order of the court granting a new trial does not in any way indicate upon what ground or for what reason the court based its conclusion. The order simply recites:

“The court being fully advised in the premises, both as to the law and facts, finds that the motion for a new trial of the said *7 plaintiff herein is well taken, and that the same should be sustained.”

The order then proceeds to sustain the motion for a new trial, etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 447, 143 P. 194, 44 Okla. 3, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shawnee-mut-fire-ins-v-school-board-of-school-dist-no-31-okla-1914.