Stokes v. Huddleston

13 S.W.2d 784, 227 Ky. 613, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 934
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 1, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 S.W.2d 784 (Stokes v. Huddleston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stokes v. Huddleston, 13 S.W.2d 784, 227 Ky. 613, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 934 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Commissioner Drury

— Reversing.

The appellants, J. L. Stokes, O. F. Shearer, W. A. Dicken, and T. H. Dyer, are seeking to reverse a judgment for $4,500, recovered against them by the appellee, *615 Huddleston. In 1920, Huddleston purchased of one Ben Hancock, a small flourmill at Snow in Clinton county, Ky. In 1925, and continuously since his purchase of it, Huddleston was, and had been, endeavoring to insure this property. He applied to Stokes & Shearer, who maintained an insurance agency at Monticello, in Wayne county, and they were unable to procure the insurance for him. He then applied to Dicken & Dyer, who were engaged in the insurance business at Albany, in Clinton county, and they were unable to procure insurance for him. He had made such applications to others and had been uniformly unsuccessful. Huddleston and his brother-in-law, W. L. Stokes, made a survey of the property, made a diagram of it and arranged a schedule showing that he desired 'to procure $2,000 insurance on the building, $3,000 on the machinery in the building, and $1,000 on the stock of grain, flour, bran, etc., and this schedule was submitted to various insurance agencies. It was submitted to Stokes & Shearer, and they sent this schedule to various insurance agents and agencies, among which was the agency of Raymond O. Davis of New Albany, Ind., and he in turn sent it to J. P. Wilkinson & Co., of Wilmington, Del., and on December 3, 1925, Wilkinson sent to Stokes & Shearer an insurance policy for the sum desired, $6,000, purporting to have been issued by the United Society G-eneral Transportation Assurance & Reassurance Corporation of Naples, Italy. This policy was mailed by Stokes & Shearer to Dicken & Dyer at Albany, Ky., these two insurance agencies having some sort of working agreement with each other. Dicken <& Dyer notified Huddleston that they had his policy, and Huddleston called at the bank where Dicken & Dyer were employed and had their office; the policy was delivered to him, and he paid Dicken & Dyer the premium thereon, $240. Dicken & Dyer deducted $12, their pro rata part of the agent’s commission from the premium, and sent the policy to Stokes & Shearer, who likewise deducted therefrom their portion of the commission, and mailed the remainder to Davis in New Albany.

The personal property covered by this policy was partially destroyed, and the mill building was totally destroyed by fire on the night of May 31, 1926. The next day Huddleston notified Dicken & Dyer of the fire, and they at once notified Stokes & Shearer, and in a few days Stokes & Shearer sent word that an adjuster would be sent down and the loss adjusted. Weeks passed without *616 anything being done. Huddleston had several conversations with Dicken & Dyer and Stokes & Shearer, without result. Dicken prepared a proof of loss for Huddleston, which was mailed to Stokes & Shearer and finally mailed to Wilmington, Del., but was returned as not being sufficient. Thereupon Stokes notified Huddleston to this effect, and suggested he prepare a new proof of loss and send it to him, and he would forward it to the company. This was done, one copy of it was sent to Wilkinson & Co., at Wilmington, and the other copy to the company at Naples, Italy. The loss was not paid. Huddleston learned that this company had not been authorized to do business in Kentucky, and, relying upon the cases of Vertrees v. Head et al., 138 Ky. 83, 127 S. W. 523, Preston v. Preston, 163 Ky. 565, 174 S. W. 2, and Simons et al. v. Vaughn & Blackwell, 165 Ky. 167, 176 S. W. 995, sued Stokes & Shearer and Dicken & Dyer, which suit resulted in the judgment appealed from.

Shearer in his separate answer, as one of his defenses, had pleaded that this property was valued by the plaintiff, Huddleston, and that the values placed thereon by him were largely in excess of the real value, so much so, and so grossly so as to be fraudulent, and that these exaggerated values were so fixed by Huddleston with the intent to defraud the defendant, and were so fixed without the knowledge, consent, or approval of the defendant. He pleaded that the total cost of this property to the plaintiff was only $6,000; that the plaintiff had since the fire, sold a portion of the property for $2,100; that the lot upon which the mill was situated was worth $750; and that there was machinery situated upon the lot worth $1,200. He pleaded that the milling house at the time of the fire was not worth exceeding $1,000; that the value of the machinery then did not exceed $2,000, and that there was not at the time of the fire any wheat or flour in the mill and only about 200 pounds of bran, 10 bushels of corn, and a bushel and a half of rye; that the insurable value of the real estate covered by that policy did not exceed $1,000, and the insurable value of the machinery and other personal property did not exceed $1,500; that Huddleston knew these things and had fraudulently concealed the real value of the property.

Dicken & Dyer and Stokes filed a separate answer, and they, like Shearer, denied everything that had been said in the petition, and, like Shearer, pleaded that the value of the property covered by the policy had been *617 fraudulently misrepresented and grossly overstated, with, the intention of defrauding the insurance company and the defendants; that the property was destroyed either by the gross and reckless carelessness and negligence of the-plaintiff or was intentionally destroyed by him or some other person at his direction, for the fraudulent purpose of rendering the defendants liable for the loss. They further pleaded that, in the proof of loss which he had mailed to the company, Huddleston had claimed that he lost 700 bushels of wheat, worth $1,400; 4,000 pounds flour, worth $200; 3,000 pounds bran, worth $60; and 600 flour bags, worth $42. Those defendants charged that each and every statement in the proof of loss was untrue and false and so known to Huddleston when he made them, and that said false statements in the proof of loss render the policy void and unenforceable as provided in the policy. The provisions of the policy on that subject are:

“This entire policy shall be void if the insured had concealed or misrepresented, in writing or otherwise, any material fact or circumstance concerning this insurance or the subject thereof; or if the interest of the insured in the property be not truly stated herein; or in case of any fraud or false swearing by the insured touching any matter relating to this insurance or the subject thereof, whether before or after the loss.”

Huddleston filed reply and denied these things, thus putting them in issue. The defendants united in .a second amended answer, wherein they pleaded that this policy provided:

‘ 'This entire policy . . . shall be void . . . if there be kept, used, or allowed on the above described premises, benzine, benzol, ... or other • explosive, ... or petroleum or any of its products of greater inflammability than kerosene oil, of the U. S. Standard,” etc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.2d 784, 227 Ky. 613, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-v-huddleston-kyctapphigh-1929.