Southern Farmers Mutual Insurance v. Motor Finance Co.

222 S.W.2d 981, 215 Ark. 601, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 796
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 28, 1949
Docket4-8832
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 981 (Southern Farmers Mutual Insurance v. Motor Finance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Farmers Mutual Insurance v. Motor Finance Co., 222 S.W.2d 981, 215 Ark. 601, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 796 (Ark. 1949).

Opinions

Frank G. Smith, J.

This is a suit to recover on a policy of insurance against upsets and other hazards. A premium of $67.47 was paid for the insurance, the return of which was tendered in the answer which denied liability, upon the ground that the insured, Hendrix, was not the sole owner of the car as stated in the policy, and that the car had been stolen.

It was stipulated that the automobile was destroyed in an upset collision, while being driven by Hendrix, and that its value at that time was $1,000. The car appears to have had a salvage value notwithstanding this stipulation.

Hendrix purchased the car from the F & F Motor Company of Nashville, Arkansas, and received a duplicate of the contract of sale which recited that the purchase price was $995.05, of which $400 was paid in cash, and a note for the balance was given. The note and the contract of sale reserved the title until the purchase money was fully paid. The note and contract were assigned by the F & F Motor Company to the Motor Finance Company, Inc., which latter company required Hendrix to insure the automobile and the policy here sued on was issued to Hendrix and the Motor Finance Company, Inc., as their respective interests might appear.

The claim for insurance was delivered to J. C. Morneau, an insurance adjuster, for settlement, who discovered on investigation that the motor number of the car did not correspond with the motor number stated -in the policy. Morneau told Hendrix he would proceed with the settlement subject to the approval of the insurance company as to the difference in motor numbers. Morneau took the wrecked car to the J. W. Finley Garage at Texarkana for its salvage value. This was done by agreement between Morneau and Hendrix, or at least without objection. Several days later a representative of Agricultural Ins. Company of Joplin, Missouri, appeared and was given possession of the car, and removed it. It was not shown that anyone objected to this action. Morneau did not know where the car was taken, but the Agricultural Ins. Company carried it away. Max Tackett testified that he was an investigator for the State Police, and that it was his duty to search for stolen automobiles, and in the discharge of this duty he investigated ears in the possession of second-hand dealers. He inspected and checked 126 cars in the possession of the F & F Motor Company, and when he found that the motor number of the car in question was not that stated in the policy, he communicated with the Automobile Underwriters Bureau of Atlanta, Georgia. This is an agency that assists in locating stolen cars. This agency discovered from its records that the car in question had been stolen in Joplin, Missouri. Tackett testified that there was no bulletin on the car.

It was ascertained that the owner had insured this car against theft with the Agricultural Ins. Co. of Joplin, Missouri, and that insurance company paid the insured the amount of his policy, and upon this claim of title took the car from the possession of the Finley Garage.

The car had been driven from Joplin to Lockesburg, Arkansas, and sold to one Welch, a store keeper, and he sold it to Fletcher Webb, who operated a garage at Glenwood, and Webb sold the car to F & F Motor Company. It was not claimed that Welch, Webb or the F & F Motor Company were aware that the car had been stolen, and it was expressly conceded that their purchases “were on the level,” that is, without knowledge that the car had been stolen.

This suit was brought by Hendrix and the Motor Finance Company, Inc., as assignee of the contract of purchase, and as has been said, was defended upon the ground that Hendrix was not the sole owned of the car, as the policy of insurance stated him to be.

The instructions in the case cannot be reconciled. Those on the part of the plaintiffs were to the following effect. It was essential only that Hendrix have an insurable interest in the car, and he had that interest if he would be benefited by the continued existence of the car and would suffer a direct pecuniary loss by its destruction. The jury was instructed that the statement as to the ownership of the car contained in the policy was a mere representation and that its falsity, if false, would not defeat the recovery unless Hendrix knew it was false or was chargeable with such knowledge. This instruction in effect directed a verdict for the plaintiffs as no contention was made that Hendrix was aware that the car had been stolen.

Oh the other hand the jury was instructed that if the automobile was a stolen car and not the property of Hendrix, a verdict should be returned in favor of the insurance company. The jury was further instructed that all property obtained by larceny shall be restored to the owner, and that no sale, whether in good faith on the part of the purchaser or not, shall divest the owner of his right to such property. This last instruction is a copy of § 1292 of Pope’s Digest, and the court gave as an instruction the following section of Pope’s Digest, No. 1293, which reads as follows: “Any person losing property or any valuable thing by larceny, robbery or burglary may maintain his action, not only against such felon, but against any person whatsoever in whose hands or possession the same may be found.”

One of the leading cases on the subject of insurance issued upon a stolen car is that of Hessen v. Iowa Automobile Ins. Co., 195 Ia. 141, 190 N. W. 150, 30 A. L. R. 657. This case contains a review of the leading cases on the subject and is extensively annotated in 30 A. L. R. 657. Supplements to this annotation appear in 38 A. L. R. 1123 and 46 A. L. R. 657.

This case held upon a review of many other cases that an insurable interest was essential to the validity of a policy of insurance and that a title or interest to a car acquired through theft did not constitute an insurable interest although the car had been purchased by the insured in entire good faith without knowledge that it had been stolen.

It was said in Blashfield’s Cyclopedia of Automobile Law and Practice, Vol. 6, § 3503: “While it has been held on the one hand' that the bona fide possession of a stolen vehicle does not give the holder any sort of title' such as will measure up to the requirements for an insurable interest, elsewhere a purchaser in good faith of an automobile for a valuable consideration, who is in undisputed possession of it, has an interest therein sufficient to enable him to recover on a policy insuring it, issued to him while in such possession, despite its having been stolen from the original rightful owner. ’ ’

The case of Barnett v. London Assurance Corp., 245 Pac. 3, 138 Wash. 673, 46 A. L. R. 526, is cited as authority for the text last quoted. This is one of the cases cited in the supplemental annotation on the subject in 46 A. L. R. 526.

In this Barnett case, supra, the Supreme Court of Washington said: “Even thought the automobile may have been originally stolen from the rightful owner, the respondent had the title and the right to possession of it as against all the world, except the rightful owner, assuming that the car had been stolen from him. In Norris v. Alliance Ins. Co., 1 N. J. Misc. 315, 123 Atl.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 981, 215 Ark. 601, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-farmers-mutual-insurance-v-motor-finance-co-ark-1949.