Southern Building & Loan Ass'n v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance

23 Pa. Super. 88, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 20
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 22, 1903
DocketAppeal, No. 48
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 Pa. Super. 88 (Southern Building & Loan Ass'n v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Building & Loan Ass'n v. Pennsylvania Fire Insurance, 23 Pa. Super. 88, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 20 (Pa. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Opinion by

Beayer, J.,

The defendant company on March 28, 1895, issued to John Nodzen its policy of insurance against loss by fire for three years, on two several dwelling houses in Lackawanna county, in the sum of $500 each. Nodzen, having borrowed money from plaintiff, had given it, January 17,1895, a mortgage upon his property, afterwards insured for $1,000. By the terms of the policy, “loss, if any, payable to the Southern Building & Loan Association of Knoxville, Tennessee, as their interest may appear.”

[93]*93In December, 1895, Nodzen conveyed the property so insured to his wife, died in June, 1896, and on October 11, 1897, one of the buildings was entirely destroyed by fire.

December 10, 1897, E. R. W. Searle, attorney for plaintiff, forwarded to the general agents of the defendant a paper, purporting to be a proof of loss which was received by them the next day. , The same day, December 11, Searle called upon Shoemaker, a member of the firm of Thompson, Derr & Brother, the general agents. The proof of loss was then in their office, no objection was made to it and, as he testified, Searle was assured by Shoemaker that the loss would be adjusted as speedily as possible and that he “ need not pay any more attention to it.” December 13,1897, the proof of loss was returned to Searle by the general agents with a letter of transmittal in which they say : “We call your attention to the fact that, as we understand it, you are not an officer of the Southern Building & Loan Association of Knoxville, Tennessee; as a consequence, this paper is not a satisfactory proof of loss.” A paper containing practically the same statement of facts as that furnished by Searle was subsequently furnished, signed and sworn to by the receivers of the plaintiff company.

September 27,1898, suit was brought in Susquehanna county and summons directed to sheriff of Philadelphia county, who returned it served upon John L. Thompson, vice president of the company. It does not appear from the abstract of proceedings nor in the appendix of appellant’s paper-book when, or how, or by whom an appearance was entered for defendant. It does appear, however, that November 14,1898, a motion to strike off service of summons for reasons appearing on face of return was filed and, on April 10, 1899, a general affidavit of defense was filed by Wm. D. B. Ainey, attorney for the defendant. This affidavit is not printed in appellant’s paper-book but is contained in full in that of the appellee. A supplemental affidavit of defense was filed August 12,1899, and, on August 26, 1900, a paper, which is both a plea in abatement and a plea in bar, was filed by the attorney of the defendant. The relevant facts are thus fully stated, because they are essential to a clear understanding of the discussion which follows.

The case was laboriously tried in the court below and, as a result of the trial and of previous proceedings, we have thirty [94]*94assignments of error. These, however, may be considered in groups under the several general subjects as adopted by the appellant in the argument.

1. As to the jurisdiction of the court.-

There can be no question of the right of a plaintiff to bring his action for the recovery of a loss against an insurance company in any county in the commonwealth in which he can secure such a service as will bring the defendant legally into court, irrespective of the location of the property destroyed. The Act of April 24, 1857, P. L. 318, gave special authority, if suit was brought in the county in which the property insured was located, to have the summons served in any county of the commonwealth. It was simply an additional method of bringing the "defendant into court. The summons in this case was evidently issued under the provisions of this law. The service was confessedly irregular but the irregularity could be waived by the defendant.

If an appearance had been entered solely for the purpose of having the service set aside, the defendant could not have been held thereby to have submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the court, but there is nothing which we can find in the record as presented by the appellant which limits the purpose of the appearance by attorney, and such a limitation is expressly negatived both in law and fact by the affidavit of defense, omitted from the appellant’s paper-pook, which was filed April 10,1899, by Mr. Ainey, who describes himself as “the attorney of the Pennsylvania Fire Insurance Co., the above-named defendant,” in which a full and elaborate defense in the nature of a special plea is set forth with much precision and in which every form of legal defense is invoked, except the irregularity of the service of the summons. Assuming, as stated in the opinion of the court overruling the plea in abatement, that the appearance of Ainey was originally de bene esse for the purpose of moving to have the service of the summons set aside, he evidently abandoned that motion, for it was never pressed or acted upon, so far as the record shows, and brought the defendant within the jurisdiction of the court by setting forth substantial grounds of defense in the manner already indicated: MacGeorge v. Chemical Mfg. Co., 141 Pa. 575 ; Jeannette Boro. v. Roehme, 9 Pa. Superior Ct. 33. Even the plea in abatement, so-called, filed [95]*95August 6,1900 (which, we think should be 1899), was bad, because it contained a plea in abatement and a plea in bar, which are inconsistent with each other; the one denying and the other appealing to the jurisdiction of the court. “It is perfectly clear that a plea in abatement cannot be pleaded at the same time with a plea in bar: 1 Bac. Abr. title, Abatement.” “ When a plea in abatement and a plea in bar are filed together, the plea in abatement will be stricken off by the court: ” 1 T. & H. Pr. sec. 519. The several assignments of error relating to the jurisdiction of the court are, therefore, overruled.

2. As to the proof of loss.

Whether Brown was the “ general agent ” of the defendant company or not is a matter of little consequence. As a matter of fact, his notice of the loss brought the adjuster of the company upon the ground. He proceeded to adjust the loss but in the course of the adjustment discovered that the title had been transferred by the insured in his lifetime to his wife and thereupon suspended the adjustment of the loss, declared the company not liable therefor and quit the premises. This, according to our decisions from Penn. Fire Ins. Co. v. Dougherty, 102 Pa. 568, and Roe v. Dwelling House Ins. Co., 149 Pa. 94, has been held to be a waiver of proofs of loss, the questions as to what occurred at the time of adjustment being, of course, for the jury. But it is claimed that the mortgagee in this case, having subsequently undertaken to furnish such proof, is bound by the sufficiency thereof and must be held to have waived the waiver. We so held in Ulysses Elgin Butter Co. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 384, but that was a case in which there had not been a total loss and where, after proofs of loss were furnished, specific information as to important facts necessary to a complete understanding of the situation were demanded, the defects arising from vital omissions pointed out and there was a total failure to supply them, and has, therefore, little applicability here. It is also to be remarked that this question was not raised in the court below and no request made for any ruling thereon.

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23 Pa. Super. 88, 1903 Pa. Super. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-building-loan-assn-v-pennsylvania-fire-insurance-pasuperct-1903.