Third National Bank v. Yorkshire Insurance

267 S.W. 445, 218 Mo. App. 660, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 170
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 267 S.W. 445 (Third National Bank v. Yorkshire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Third National Bank v. Yorkshire Insurance, 267 S.W. 445, 218 Mo. App. 660, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 170 (Mo. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an action on a fire and theft insurance policy issued upon an automobile belonging to plaintiff, McAninch. There was a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiffs in the sum of $1295-, and defendant has appealed. On the 10th day of May, 1923, while the policy was in force the automobile was stolen and afterwards burned. The policy is in the sum of $1000 and insured the automobile for one year beginning April 23, 1923. A short time after the fire McAninch borrowed the sum of $750 from plaintiff bank and assigned to the bank an interest to that extent in the insurance policy and claim against defendant..

Defendant’s amended answer alleges, among other things, that the policy provided that if the automobile was encumbered by a mortgage the policy should be void and pleads that the policy was void for the reason that at the time of the issuance of the policy and at the time of the alleged loss the car was encumbered by a chattel mortgage.

Defendant insists that its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained for the reason that on account of perjury and false statements of McAninch he is unworthy of belief. There have been two suits on this policy. In the first suit McAninch alone was plaintiff and his attorneys having discovered that he had assigned an interest in the policy and claim to the bank, dismissed that suit and brought the present one in the name of the two plaintiffs. McAninch’s deposition was taken in the former suit. He testified in that deposition that when he purchased the car he gave a chattel mortgage thereon for a part of the purchase price; that at the time the policy was solicited by defendant’s agent *663 this mortgage had been paid off; that this mortgage was released after the fire and was turned over to the de fendant; that prior to the time that the insurance was taken out there was a second mortgage upon the car made to one Shepherd which plaintiff, McAninch, had paid off in cash before the policy was written but which had not then been released; that afterwards this mortgage was likewise released and sent to the defendant. He testified that he told Dow, the insurance agent who solicited the policy, that the second mortgage had been paid off but not released and Dow said, “Well, we’ll write it that way.” Defendant now insists that Mc-Aninch did not tell Dow of the Shepherd mortgage and this contention is based on what appears in the deposition following the testimony we have related. Defendant’s contention rests upon the following testimony of McAninch:

“Q. What did you tell him (the agent) when you went to take out the insurance ? A. Told him I wanted insurance to insure the car against fire and theft.

“Q. What else did you tell him if anything? A. Nothing.”

After testifying as just quoted McAninch again explained that he told the agent that there was a mortgage upon the car that had been paid off but had not been released.

It is not apparent what the witness meant when he said that he told the agent nothing except that he wanted to insure the car against fire and theft, but after giving this testimony he further testified that he told the agent about the mortgage. Whether he did not understand the question at the time he testified that he told the agent nothing else or whether he had reference to the matter of the description of the car, it not plain. Of course, he must have said something else to the agent for the reason that the agent would not have known the amount of insurance to be written if McAninch had not *664 told Mm. The deposition fairly construed shows that McAninch told the agent about the Shepherd mortgage.

However, McAninch’s testimony at the trial was different from that given in his deposition. At the trial he testified that he told the agent that the Shepherd mortgage had been executed by him to secure the payment of $600 but that as a matter of fact no valid note and mortgage ever existed because the note and mortgage were executed without any consideration therefor; that the mortgage was placed upon the automobile because he was threatened- with a suit upon a forged or fraudulent note, and it was executed for the purpose of preventing the holder of the note from levying upon the automobile in case he obtained judgment; that within a short time after the execution of the note and mortgage Shepherd delivered the note to McAninch. Mc-Aninch further testified that the mortgage was not released until after the loss, that the placing of the Shepherd mortgage upon the car was McAninch’s own idea; that he did so without consulting his attorney but that when the latter found out what he had done, he told Mm that such a step was useless and he, McAninch. thereupon obtained the note from Shepherd. He testified that when his deposition was taken he had never been a witness before and was somewhat confused and had testified to facts concerning the second mortgage when he had the first in mind; that he stated to the agent-all the facts in connection with the execution of the mortgage prior to and at the time of the issuance of the policy. Dow testifying for defendant stated that he did not at any time have any information or knowledge of the existence of the Shepherd mortgage.

Shepherd, a witness for plaintiffs, testified concerning the giving of the second mortgage substantially as McAninch testified at the trial. He stated, however, that McAninch told him in the fall of 1923 before the first suit was filed that if any one asked him anything about the mortgage “to tell them that he (McAninch) *665 paid me in cash” the sum of $600. ITe did not instruct Shepherd to tell this to the attorney for the insurance company but to tell any one who came to see him about it. He also testified that plaintiffs’ attorney, O’Bannon, told him, between March 26th and 29th, 1924, that he should not tell anybody the real facts in the matter until he went on the witness stand and not to tell the attorneys for the insurance company the real facts and truth of the matter until that time. Upon being recalled he testified that O’Bannon told him to “just let this go as it is until you come on the witness stand;” that he should relate the matter just as it occurred when he got on the witness stand. O’Bannon testified that whal he told Shepherd was not to talk to the attorneys of the insurance company. Shepherd further testified that a few days prior to March 29, 1924, before the present suit was first set for trial, the attorneys for defendant came to see him and that he told them that McAninch had paid him $600 in cash approximately two months after the destruction of the automobile and that the $600 in question was a loan made by the witness to Mc-Aninch. Shepherd admitted that what he told the attorneys was not true but that he told them this because directed to do so by McAninch.

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 445, 218 Mo. App. 660, 1924 Mo. App. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/third-national-bank-v-yorkshire-insurance-moctapp-1924.