Trinity Universal Ins. Co. v. Winter

67 S.W.2d 926, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 1934
DocketNo. 2921.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 S.W.2d 926 (Trinity Universal Ins. Co. v. Winter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trinity Universal Ins. Co. v. Winter, 67 S.W.2d 926, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 46 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

WALTHALL, Justice.

This suit was brought by L. C. Winter and W. F. Rose, the latter doing business as Rose Investment Company, against Universal Casualty Company, Universal Automobile Insurance Company, and Trinity Universal Insurance Company, to recover $240 and interest upon an insurance policy covering a certain automobile, issued by the Universal Casualty Company; subsequently the liability by reason of the insurance policy was assumed by the Trinity Universal Insurance Company.

W. F. Rose, in writing the motor number in the application for the insurance, erroneously gave the motor number of the automobile insured against theft as 2532937, instead of 2332937. The insurance policy issued by the defendant insurance company contained the description furnished to it by W. F. Rose.

The automobile was reported to have been stolen, and a claim for payment was made upon the defendant insurance company issuing the policy and payment refused. The controlling facts with x-eference to the loss in this case are not in dispute. They are substantially as follows:

The undisputed evidence showed that on or about December 1, 1930, E. R. Hill bought for $250 in cash from J. A. Waters a 1929 model, four-door sedan, used Ford automobile, blue-black in color, and took from the vendor a bill of sale; that on December 4, 1930, Mr. Hill sold his automobile to the plaintiff L. C. Winter, who executed to him in part payment of the purchase price a promissory note and chattel mortgage in the amount of $305; that on the same date Mr. Hill sold and transferred the said note and chattel mortgage to the plaintiff W. F. Rose, doing-business as Rose Investment Company, for a consideration of $250 cash; that the plaintiff L. C. Winter left the matter of obtaining insurance up to the owner of his note; that during the month of December, 1930, the plaintiff W. F. Rose was an agent of the defendant Universal Casualty Company, with authority to cover risks; that H. C. McClure, an employee of Rose Investment Company, on behalf of the plaintiff, and also on behalf of the defendant Universal Casualty Company, made application on its blank form to its home office for an insurance policy on this automobile, and, taking the number of the motor from the note and chattel mortgage, he declared in such application that the motor number was 2532937; he otherwise described the car as being a four-door sedan, 1929 model, used Ford automobile purchased by the assured, L. C. Winter, on December 4, 1930; that his employer, Rose Investment Company, had no instructions from its principal, Universal Casualty Company, to make a personal examination of the motor number borne by automobiles insured by such agency; the defendant Universal Casualty Company issued its policy describing this automobile as it was described in the application, and insuring it for L C. Winter in the amount of *927 $240 against the hazards of fire, theft, and other casualties, with a clause declaring that the loss should be payable to the -Rose Investment Company as its interest might appear, and the premium for such policy was. paid; the plaintiff L. O. Winter at no time owned a Ford automobile other than the one purchased from Mr. Hill, and the plaintiff W. F. Rose owned no note upon any automobile bearing motor No. 2532937, unless this automobile bore that motor number; in insuring this automobile and in preparing the application for the policy, H. O. McClure (agent for both plaintiff and defendant) intended to insure the automobile purchased from Mr. Hill by Mr. Winter on December 4, 1930, the chattel mortgage note upon which was on the same date purchased by Rose Investment Company; on December 29, 1930, while the insurance was in effect, and this automobile was worth at least $250, it was stolen by unknown persons and was not thereafter heard of; immediate notice of the theft was given to the police and sheriff’s departments and to the 'defendant, Universal Casualty Company; sufficient proof of loss was duly and timely furnished; the plaintiff L. C. Winter still owes $305 and interest on the note and chattel mortgage covering the automobile, which note and mortgage are owned by the plaintiff W. F. Rose.

The defendants, insurance companies, defended against liability on the following grounds: That the motor number on a Ford car is a necessary part of its description; that the car which it insured as having motor No. 2532937 had not been stolen, but at the time of said loss, and long prior thereto, was owned by Val L. Baumgard of Atlantic City, N. J.; that the motor number was given to it as being 2532937, whereas the actual motor number alleged to have been on said automobile was 2332937, which was a material misrepresentation of a material fact; that, had the Universal Casualty Company known that the motor number furnished to it was incorrect, it would not have insured said automobile and would not have issued plaintiffs the insurance policy upon which this suit is based ; that W. F. Rose, doing business as Rose Investment Company, was an agent of the Universal Casualty Company at the time he applied for the insurance policy involved in this controversy, and received a commission on the premium paid for said policy, and that he is therefore estopped to claim that the mistake made by him was binding upon the defendant; the plaintiff L. C. Winter authorized Rose Investment Company to take out insurance on said automobile in any company to be designated by said W. F. Rose, and obligated himself to pay the premiums for any such insurance that W. F. Rose should obtain, and, by reason thereof, L. O. Winter is bound by the act of W. F. Rose; that the act of W. F. Rose and L. C. Winter in furnishing the Universal Casualty Company false information concerning the description of said automobile prevented the Universal Casualty Company from recovering said ear from the thief or thieves who stole the same; that it is necessary for the company to have the correct motor number of any automobile which it insures, for the reason that a large proportion of the automobiles which are stolen are recovered by the company and returned to the true owners, thus relieving the company from any liability under its policy, and that the Universal Casualty Company would have been able to have found and recovered said automobile had it been furnished the true and correct number of said ear; that the car purported to have been owned by L. C. Winter, and alleged to have been insured with the Universal Casualty Company, was a stolen car, and thus neither L. C. Winter nor W. F. Rose had any insurable interest therein; that the car having motor No. 2332937 was not stolen, and therefore no claim as against the Universal Casualty Company can rightfully be asserted.

The case was tried to the court without a jury. The trial court made no findings of fact. Judgment was entered for W. F. Rose against each of defendant companies for the amount of said policy and interest from April 1, 1931. Winter was denied recovery.

Trinity Universal Insurance Company alone prosecutes this appeal.

Opinion.

The insurance policy involved in this controversy provides:

“Universal Casualty Company, Dallas, Texas.
(Hereinafter called the Company)

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W.2d 926, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trinity-universal-ins-co-v-winter-texapp-1934.