Toupkin v. Federal Insurance Co.

25 S.E.2d 212, 125 W. Va. 458, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 23
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1943
Docket9375
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 25 S.E.2d 212 (Toupkin v. Federal Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toupkin v. Federal Insurance Co., 25 S.E.2d 212, 125 W. Va. 458, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 23 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge:

Dr. J. H. Toupkin instituted this action in assumpsit in the Circuit Court of Mason County for the purpose of recovering from the defendant, Federal Insurance Company, three thousand dollars, being the face of a fire insurance policy covering hospital furniture, fixtures, equipment, instruments, supplies, clothing, personal effects and other merchandise located in a frame house in the City of Point Pleasant used by the plaintiff as both a hospital building and dwelling, the fire having occurred on the first day of April, 1940. To a judgment for twenty-three hundred dollars based upon a verdict for a like amount, the defendant was granted this writ of error. The assignments of error, twelve in number, are condensed as follows in the brief of the plaintiff in error which we think adequately covers the questions submitted for decision: (1) Whether a policy provision excluding from the coverage afforded thereby property covered by a chattel mortgage was waived by the insurer due to information allegedly given to its agent in connection with the plaintiff’s application and prior to the effective date of the policy, a material part of the allegedly lost and damaged property having admittedly been so encumbered; (2) whether the plaintiff’s evidence of true and actual value *460 at the time of the fire, properly admitted, was sufficient to sustain the verdict; (3) whether the plaintiff as a matter of law was guilty of false swearing in order to sustain his claim; (4) whether certain evidence offered by the defendant in attacking the plaintiff’s professional standing and character was wrongfully excluded to the defendant’s prejudice; and (5) whether it was error to refuse to direct a verdict for the defendant or to discharge the jury prior to verdict, or to set aside the verdict in favor of the plaintiff due to a tentative report by the foreman of the jury in which it was allegedly stated, in effect, that there was insufficient proof to enable the jury to arrive at the definite amount of the plaintiff’s claim, and the court was asked to furnish the jury with the definite figure, the trial judge declined to do so, and directing the jury to consider further of their verdict.

Before discussing the questions of law arising upon the assignments of error, a general statement of the circumstances disclosed of record will make them more easily understood.

When the plaintiff took the stand in January, 1942, he stated that he was thirty-two years of age. He seems to have graduated from a medical school in 1933, and to have devoted the eighteen months immediately following to an interneship in an approved hospital, then to have been commissioned as a member of the United States Army Medical Corps, being assigned to Civilian Conservation Corps duty for ten months. He did “contract practice” for approximately six months before locating in Point Pleasant, in June, 1936. He maintained an office in the business district of Point Pleasant until March, 1939, when he rented- a large frame residence which he used as both a dwelling for himself and wife and a hospital, moving his instruments and office equipment, which seem then to have been uninsured, as well as equipment and instruments then purchased, into the building operated as the Mason County Hospital. The building'was occupied under a five-year lease for sixty dollars a month, and when the *461 hospital was opened a technician and a nurse were employed, their salaries being sixty dollars a month each, and also a- housekeeper for thirty dollars per month.

In January, 1939, prior to the opening of the hospital, plaintiff borrowed three thousand dollars from the Citizens National Bank, securing it by a chattel mortgage upon the major part of his medical and surgical equipment which was later damaged or destroyed by the fire. On April 14, 1939, the policy upon which this action was brought was written by the defendant, the coverage of which was increased on February 27, 1940, to six thousand dollars, the plaintiff a few days thereafter purchasing another policy written by a different company and covering the same articles for three thousand dollars.

The business of the hospital did not prosper for various reasons, so that when the fire occurred it had no patients, plaintiff was delinquent in the payment of rent, several small judgments had been rendered against him, he had been unable to meet certain periodic payments, and his bank account was negligible.

On the evening of April first, Dr. Toupkin and his wife, between eight-thirty and nine o’clock, had gone to a moving picture, leaving no one in the hospital, the technician and nurse not then being employed.' The “flash” fire which caused the damage broke out while they were watching the picture, and when an usher announced that fact to the plaintiff he at first thought, according to his statement, that it was a Fool’s Day hoax.

Dealing with the questions submitted in the numerical order heretofore given them, the policy provision relating to chattel mortgages, which the plaintiff in error contends should be construed as a promissory warranty and not as a condition precedent to the coverage of the policy taking effect, reads as follows: “Unless otherwise provided by agreement in writing added hereto this Company shall not be liable for loss or damage to any property insured hereunder while incumbered by a chattel mortgage, and during the time of such incumbrance this Company shall *462 be liable only for loss or damage to any other property insured hereunder.” It will be seen that the paragraph in question is subject to two constructions, that is to say, as excluding property “insured hereunder while incumbered by a chattel mortgage”, or “not liable for loss or damage to any property insured hereunder while incumbered by a chattel mortgage”, the question being whether the phrase “while incumbered by a chattel mortgage” relates to the phrase “insured hereunder” or to the phrase “loss or damage to any property”. It will be observed that there is no comma following the word “hereunder”, so that if the adverb (?) “while” immediately following is held to modify the verb to which it is more closely related in space and not separated by punctuation, that word would be “insured”. If, on the other hand, the word “while” is taken as an adverb relating to the word “loss”, the contention of the plaintiff in error would be maintainable. Cases need not be cited to maintain the proposition that a fire insurance policy, if ambiguous, is to be construed in favor of the insured, so that, even conceding the difficulty that we have attempted to point out amounts to an actual ambiguity, which we think is rather doubtful, we are still of the opinion that the provision against chattel mortgages speaks as of the time that the insurance contract takes effect and operates to prevent coverage during the life of the chattel mortgage. That being so, we further think that the plaintiff testified to circumstances that would justify the jury in concluding that an agent acting as a vice-principal of the defendant insurance company was informed of the existence of a chattel mortgage upon a considerable part of plaintiff’s property prior to the issuance of the policy, and that the insurer in following its possession of that information with the issuance of the policy, waived the effect of the chattel mortgage provision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 S.E.2d 212, 125 W. Va. 458, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toupkin-v-federal-insurance-co-wva-1943.